Warcimino

Warcimino ( German Varzmin, Kasch. Wôrcémino ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and is part of the municipality Potegowo ( Pottangow ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical location

Warcimino located 30 kilometers east of the county town of Slupsk on a side street that Chlewnica (Karl height, on the Polish national road 6 and former German Reich Straße 2, also European Route 28 today ) together with Kozin ( Kosemühl, at the province road 212, former National Highway 158). Rail connection is via the station Potegowo on the railway line from Stargard in Pomerania to Gdańsk.

History

The former estate village Varzmin is its historic village form after a small village streets. In 1480 it was in the possession of those of Grumbkow. In 1493 it possessed by the clumsy and 1576 Pavelz.

At an unknown date Varzmin was divided into Varzmin A and B Varzmin, and the name survived until 1945 when the two villages of the rural community Varzmin.

Varzmin A had a great Vorwerk, two farmers, two Kossäten and a water mill. The most famous owner was the Heads of State and Council of War Joachim Ernst von Grumbkow. Later it came into Sophie Podewils. Through marriage it came to Friedrich Otto von Bonin, 1827 inherited Otto Heinrich Ferdinand von Bonin. The Last Heir was Ernst von Bonin, who died in 1931. In 1910 139 residents were registered in Varzmin A.

Varzmin B had a small Vorwerk, two Büdnern and skating on the field mark in 1784 in the possession of those of Pavelz. During the 19th century Varzmin B came into bourgeois property as the owner of Schulz ( 1893), Bluhm (1910 ), Paul Leader (1914 ) and finally to Wilhelm angle. In 1910 Varzmin B counted 62 inhabitants.

Besides the two goods, there was only a farm in the community, in the 1933 total of 182 and 1939, 141 people lived. It belonged until 1945 to the district of Stolp in Pomerania Region of the Prussian province of Pomerania. Varzmin was in the official and the civil registry district Mickrow (now Polish: Mikorowo ) and in the District Court area Lauenburg in Pommern ( Lębork ) incorporated.

Towards the end of the Second World War in 1945, Soviet troops occupied the village on March 9. Later Poles came and took possession of the houses and farms of the defenseless villagers. The indigenous population was expelled by the Poles. Varzmin was renamed Warcimino.

Later on in the Federal Republic of Germany 68 determines and in the German Democratic Republic 37 expelled from Varzmin villagers.

The village is now part of Gmina Potegowo in powiat Słupski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship ( 1975-1998 Slupsk Province ) belongs. Here now live 250 inhabitants.

Church

Until 1945, the majority of the population of Varzmin Protestant denomination. The village belonged to the parish Mickrow ( Mikorowo ) in the church Stolp - old town in the ecclesiastical province of the Church of the Old Prussian Pomerania Union. Last German minister was Pastor Gustav Öhrn. The few Catholics were incorporated into the parish in Stolp.

Since 1945 lives almost exclusively Catholic population in Warcimino. The place now belongs to the parish in Skórowo ( Schurow ) in the Office of the Dean Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland. Here surviving Protestant church members are incorporated into the Cross parish in Slupsk ( Stolp ).

School

The elementary school in Varzmin was stage before 1945. In 1932 here was teaching a teacher 29 school children. Last German teacher was Gerhard Vollbrecht.

References

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